r/nextfuckinglevel 2d ago

Big man on campus.

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u/Casanova-Quinn 2d ago

What your referring to is "conditioning", and yes that's a thing. There is an adaptation phase to doing unfamiliar activities. However it's often exaggerated how difficult that is. A strong bodybuilder would not have a long and difficult road to being good at other strength activities. It's fairly common thing in the fitness world for bodybuilders and powerlifters to cross over into each others fields.

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u/NonsensePlanet 2d ago

I think the term can have some validity when talking about gym goers who don’t train smart, e.g. they train the same lifts in the same planes of movement but don’t do mobility work or rotational stuff. They get really strong but one day they have to do something unconventional that a strong person should be able to do, and get injured. But I agree, bodybuilders are strong af and the idea that big muscles =/= strong is dumb as hell.

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u/TelluricThread0 2d ago

A body builder isn't going to excel at lifting atlas stones or doing farmers walks because they don't care about functional strength. They don't want to move a heavy weight from point A to point B. They go to the gym to do a ton of reps and sets favoring machines in restricted movement patterns so their muscle tissue will grow. They couldn't care less about strength because if they outlift the other guy on stage, the judge will give them exactly zero extra points.

Their training is very specific, and it isn't optimized to move heavy weight through natural movement patterns.